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Spring 2007 Curriculum

Note: The underlined course title indicates the Department/Program that is the Parent of the course.

Translation Workshops:

Specialized workshops training students to translate usually from foreign languages to English. Scheduled instruction in French, Spanish and Portuguese. Rosemary Arrojo, Marilyn Gaddis Rose. See descriptions below:

TRIP 572/472/COLI 572/472/FREN 572/LACS 480A /PIC 612B/ SPAN 582

Literary Workshop:

This is a creative writing workshop in which students meet weekly with their instructor and work on texts of their choice. Texts should be of moderate length, e.g. a novelette, a long one-act play, a poem cycle. Students are strongly encouraged to look for materials that have not yet been translated and to seek formal permission from publishers.

Arrojo, TR 11:40-1:05

TRIP 573/473/COLI 573/473/FREN 573/LACS 480B/PIC 612C/SPAN 583

Non-Literary Workshop:

This workshop develops a routine of translation practice organized by language pairs. Students are expected to work at a professional pace, with an average of 1,000 words per week.

Arrojo, TR 11:40-1:05

Other required activities: Both literary and non-literary translators are required to participate in three 1 hour seminars conducted by R. Arrojo (times and dates TBA), in which they will be expected to discuss reading assignments in connection with their practical experience.Both literary and non-literary translators will be required to briefly discuss a chosen topic in our final meeting.

TRIP 580B/COLI580T POSTCOLONIAL TRANSLATION STUDIES

This seminar will examine contemporary notions of translation as transformation, and their consequences for an ethics of interpretation. We will concentrate on theoretical statements associated with postcolonial thought with an emphasis on Latin American approaches.

Arrojo, W 1:10-4:10

TRIP 580C/461/COLI 580C, LACS 580C, LING 449B, PIC 612D

Introduction To Computer-Assisted Translation Tools:

Practical introduction to computer-assisted translation and terminology management tools. This course will present a variety of computer tools for translators, including both Web-based applications and software specially designed for translation and terminology management. There will be an initial presentation of basic concepts in terminology management and documentation, as well as an introduction to translation project management. The course is not language-specific; the skills will be useful for various disciplines.

Arrojo, M 1:10-4:00

TRIP 707 FOREIGN READING PROFICIENCY

Course designed to help graduate students improve their use of a foreign language as a research tool. Targets acquisition of reading knowledge by going directly to actual texts. Available to undergraduates through Comparative Literature. Scheduled instruction in French and Spanish.

Arrojo, Gaddis-Rose, W 1:00-2:30

Coordinated Curriculum:

COLI 517L MEMORY, LANGUAGE, FASCISM

This course will examine approaches of postwar poetics in Europe after World War II. The major focus is on the work of Ingeborg Bachmann, who after finishing her dissertation on Heidegger turned to literature and became one of postwar Europe 's most innovative writers. Her poems and prose paradigmatically explore the possibility of literature as an ethical-aesthetical force after catastrophe and specifically the Holocaust. For Bachmann fascism is an experience of language, and language an experience of fascism. The search for a new language in her work, therefore, is an unending struggle with the violence of the everyday, forgetting, genocide, colonial wars, and the murder of women. Discussing her work in context of larger debates on the limits of language, poetry and politics, memory and resistance, crime and fiction we will include readings of Wittgenstein, Adorno, Benjamin, Arendt, Celan and Agamben.

Brinker-Gabler, T 1:15-4:15

COLI 517S/AFST 373 THE AFRICAN NOVEL

Explores the development of the novel in Africa , both historically and thematically. On one hand, traces formal growth of genre, beginning with its emergence from oral narrative traditions of the continent, through its attachment to certain European trends and techniques, to its present achievement in blending various traditions (African and non-African) in articulation of key problems in contemporary African socio-political life. On the other hand, examines some of the key concerns that have engaged one generation of writers after another: e.g., confrontation with European presence, critique of post-colonial leadership, apartheid and the place of women in African society.

Okpewho, TR 4:25-5:50

COLI 535A/AAAS480P THE QUESTION OF THE ORIENT

Where or what exactly is the Orient? What are its geographic, cultural, political and imaginative boundaries? What different definitions, forms, and symbols have the Orient and its related fields ( e.g., "the East," " Asia ," "Asian America") embodied in the past and what are its manifestations today? Using inter- and multidisciplinary sources and methods of inquiry, this graduate seminar explores the "question of the Orient," including a close scrutiny of its possible origins, visages, uses and abuses. Each week, the course examines a different aspect of the Orient, including the Orient as literary device, as political tool, as entertainment, as playground, as cuisine, as sexual object, as friend and as foe. Authors considered include Salman Rushdie, E.M. Forster, Marguerite Duras, Mishima Yukio, Maxine Hong Kingston, Edward Said, Lisa Lowe, Vijay Prashad, among others. Also considered are additional materials drawn from visual and filmic arts, including works by Jean-Lon Grme, David Lean, Steven Spielberg, Quentin Tarantino, among others.

Ji-Song Ku, T, 4:25-7:25

COLI 535D/ARTH 575J CONTESTATION POSTWAR ART/CULT

This seminar takes up the subject of cultural contestation as it was reinvented by postwar theorists and neo-avant-garde artists, with special attention to Europe in the 1960s. In particular, we will examine attempts to rethink resistance to late capitalism and its administered everyday life outside of orthodox leftist positions. Opening classes will analyze a number of themes: the rearticulation of montage strategies from the interwar period, developing the work of Brecht and Duchamp; the cultural politics of decolonization; notions of the reciprocal readymade, or the ambivalent function of art in revolutionary culture; and the concept of festivity and the carnivalesque. The relevance of these projects for contemporary cultural production will also be explored.

McDonough, Fri., 1:10-4:10

COLI 535E/SPAN 471N CERVANTES'S SHORT FICTION

We will examine Cervantes's "Novelas ejemplares" and several "Entremeses". Our aim will be to discuss the formal aspects of these works with special attention to their historical context. Our theoretical approach will emphasize the reading process as we develop strategies for identifying the various "exemplary" components of the fiction, and the socio-cultural, as well as dramatic, components of the "Entremeses." Prerequisite: SPAN 360 or SPAN370 or equivalent.

Fajardo, T 4:25-7:25

COLI 535H PRIMITIVISM AND THE AMERICAS

This seminar explores the paradoxes, surprises, and difficulties that an interest in Primitivism creates for writers and artists in the Americas . How do writers influenced by the historical avant-garde represent a "Primitive" that is not exotic? How does the context of the racialized societies of the Americas inflect European Primitivism? What contrasts or parallels are there between the ways different literary traditions work with this problem? How do we understand the connection between Primitivism and nationalist cultural projects? Our discussions will focus on 20th century literary texts of the Americas . We will also read classic and contemporary theoretical accounts of the primitive. Books: Franz Boas, Primitive Art; Sieglinde Lemke, Primitivist Modernism Negro: An Anthology; Alejo Carpentier, Lost Steps; Oswald de Andrade,Cannibal Manifesto.

Moreira, T, 4:25-7:25

COLI 535J LATIN AMERICAN WOMEN WRITERS: BOOM-PRESENT

Description: This course considers important literary contributions by Latin American women from the latter half of the twentieth century to the present. The primary focus is on the novel. We will engage in close textual analyses of works by: Elena Poniatowska, Claribel Alegria, Armonia Somers, Isabel Allende, Rosario Ferre, Maria Luisa Bombal, Clarice Lispector, Rosario Castellanos, Elena Garro, Diamela Eltit, and Sylvia Molloy. Sullivan, Thurs., 4:25-7:25

COLI 535M LITERATURE AFTER MEXICAN REVOLUTION

This class will examine Mexican history and literature that follow those of the Mexican Revolution, but that remain bound to the Revolution all the same. Events to be studied include: the massacres of 1968, the guerrilla movements of the 70s, repression within journalism, and the EZNL's recent Chiapas rebellion. Also analyzed, via de Certeau's The Writing of History and Gilly's The Mexican Revolution, will be the relation of history and fiction. Novels by both contemporary authors (Montemayor, Subcomandante Marcos, Taibo, Aguilar Camin, Urrea) and ones from the previous generation (Fuentes, Poniatowska, Pacheco).

Levinson, W, 4:40-7:40

COLI 574C/PIC 622G

CARIBBEAN PHILOSOPHY - (No description given)

Lugones, M, 4:40-7:40

COLI 574R GRUNDRISSE

What is at stake in Marx's concept of political economy? What are the logical and existential coordinates of the concept? Our hypothesis is this: that if the texts of Marx have any pertinence to the current situation, it is because the concept of political economy as articulated in the GRUNDRISSE opens upon an other experience of aesthesis, an other relation of poiesis to praxis, an other experience of the common, an other, communist, ontology. We pursue these issues in a close reading of the GRUNDRISSE.

Haver, R, 4:25-7:25

COLI 574S/ARTH 503F ART HIST AFTER STRUCTURALISM

The aim of this seminar will be to grasp the challenge of a set of arguments and modes of analysis from Saussure to Lvi-Strauss, Lacan, Barthes, Althusser, Foucault and Derrida that have had an enormous influence on the humanities over the past forty years, yet still stir up controversy. They do so precisely because they have interrupted the established analytical procedures and conceptual frameworks upon which the disciplines that make up the humanities including art history were founded in the nineteenth century. Yet, the effects of these disciplinary challenges have been far from negative. They have rather opened the way to a new urgency of debate and an intellectual productivity that came late to art history, but came nonetheless, provoking those varieties of dissent that the interests of marketing and established institutions have tried to repackage as The New Art History. The seminar will be conducted as a structured reading group whose emphasis will be on the close analysis of specific texts that will, however, be located in an unfolding argument, from week to week. No prior knowledge of the literature or terminology will be assumed, but a serious commitment to the reading program will be essential. Meetings will be focused on weekly readings, with regular student presentations and a variety of research tasks designed to develop specific critical and research skills. The seminar assignment will involve the preparation of a detailed syllabus on an agreed topic, including a synopsis, structured outline, readings and full bibliography. Taught concurrently with ARTH 500.

Tagg, T, 4:25-7:25

COLI 580P/EDUC 580C TEACHING THE LITERATURE OF THE AMERICAN WAR IN VIETNAM

The course includes becoming familiar with the processes of close and intertextual reading, with different modes of analytical thought, and with the practice of translating reading and thinking into writing -- and the implications of these processes for teaching this literature. We will read about the American War in Vietnam as experienced and given literary form by those who fought it, reported it or otherwise felt its immediate effects in their lives: combat veterans, nurses, journalists, etc., and consider the most effective ways of engaging, interrogating and teaching this material. By reading various genres including memoirs, letters, essays, novels, stories and poetry and by responding to this writing, we will study how any experience is multitudinous and how genres manipulate experience in different ways.

Burch, R, 4:25-7:25

EDUC 501 (also MASS 522). CRUCIAL ISSUES IN EDUCATION

Interdisciplinary framework for the study of contemporary educational problems. Analysis and criticism of current issues, uncovering historical, sociological, philosophical and economic foundations. Special attention to cultural diversity, educational equity and institutionalized forms of oppression such as racism, sexism, classism and homophobia. Stedman, 4:25-7:00

EDUC 508 (also HIST 530B). ISSUES IN U.S. HISTORY, 1877-PRESENT

This is one of two central content courses for students earning a Graduate Certificate in the Teaching of U.S. History. Exposure to selected interpretive issues in U.S. history after 1877 within a framework that permits students to focus on ways to introduce these issues into the secondary school classroom. Examination of alternative interpretations of events and processes in U.S. history, working with primary sources that underpin those interpretations. Offered in Spring 2004.

Harper, 4:40-7:40

EDUC 601 CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN EDUCATION

Examination of philosophical assumptions that inform educational practice and policy. Exploration of important relationships, including the connections between educational theory and practice, knowledge and human interests, democracy and education, and diversity and community. Theorizing is made meaningful to practitioners as they analyze contemporary educational issues not only through the writings of distinguished philosophers and social theorists, but also through their own critical frameworks.

Carpenter, 4:25-7:00

ENG 572A ENGENDERING THE NATION 1760-1830

Between the late eighteenth century and the early nineteenth century, the American colonies became the United States , and England , Scotland , Wales , and Ireland joined to become the United Kingdom . These momentous national transformations were accompanied by equally important changes in the social and political roles of ordinary men and women. This course will draw on feminist and postcolonial theory to examine how national identities shaped and were shaped by gender identities on both sides of the Atlantic . We'll place late eighteenth-century and early nineteenth-century American and British works in conversation, reading American writers like Susanna Rowson, Phillis Wheatley, and Thomas Paine along with British writers including Maria Edgeworth, Hannah More, and Mary Wollstonecraft.

Juliet Shields, TR 10:05-11:30 a.m.

Course requirements will include a class presentation, several short response papers, and a final 15-20 page essay.

ENG 572W THEORY AND HUMAN RIGHTS

Examines a variety of types of discourse dealing with issues of human rights. Sets of issues will vary from semester to semester. This spring we will consider some issues of civil rights, womens rights, workers rights. In addition to the range of discourse constituting the primary readings, applicable theory readings will be assigned.

David Bartine , TR 1:15-2:40 p.m.

ENG 572Y FOUCAULT, SAID AND GLOBALIZATION

In this course we will read several major works of Michel Foucault

(ARCHAEOLOGY OF KNOWLEDGE, MADNESS AND CIVILIZATION, DISCIPLINE AND PUNISH, LANGUAGE, COUNTER-MEMORY, PRACTICE AND CARE OF THE SELF) and of Edward Said (ORIENTALISM, COVERING ISLAM, CULTURE AND IMPERIALISM, and HUMANISM AND DEMOCRATIC CRITICISM) in the light of the debates over the relationship between the nation state and transnationalism. Besides showing the relationship (and difference) between Foucault's and Said's thought vis a vis Discourse, the course will explore the significance of their thought as it relates to the question of globalization. More specifically, it will consider their work as manifestations of thinking in the interregnum: between a dying world -- the world organized around the nation state -- and a globalized world struggling to be born. In the process the course will consider the relevance of their writing for the arguments about the waning of the nation state in the face of the rise of transnational or late capitalism (Negri and Hardt) and about the clash of civilizations (Samuel Huntington and a host of other intellectual deputies of the George W. Bush Administration).

Format: attendance; class participation; a short midterm essay (4-6 pp) and a long term paper dealing with an issue raised by the course (15-20 pp. and written as if it would be submitted for publication).

William Spanos, TR 2:50-4:15 p.m.

ENG 572Z THEORIZING RACE AND DESIRE IN COLONIAL AND POSTCOLONIAL CONTEXTS

In this course, we will think about the multiple arenas through which race is made: the economy, culture, religion, law, psychology, sexuality, and desire. Paying particular attention to the relationship between race and intimacy, we will seek to make sense of global and national stratification from colonialism to the present. Authors will include: Franz Fanon, Laura Ann Stoler, David Eng, Anne McClintock, Omni & Winant, Catherine Hall, Doris Garraway, among others.

Donette Francis, T 4:25-7:25 p.m.

ENG 593F GLOBALIZATION, CONSUMER CULTURE, AND THE ENVIRONMENT

In a time of increasing environmental crisis--from hurricanes and tsunamis, global warming, overpopulation, and species extinction to health problems associated with food production, new disease epidemics, and the depletion of the natural resources such as oil on which all advanced economies depend--public attention and popular culture are finally turning green. Contemporary environmentalism or green philosophy is one of the best-developed critiques of globalization and consumer culture. Debates in contemporary environmentalism center around the shift from a mechanistic, transcendent world view prevalent since the Enlightenment--an anthropocentric, human-centered ideology where nature is "other"--to a more hybrid, relational, and immanent model of thought that takes into account the concepts of the intrinsic value of nature, environmental justice, sustainable development, and green marketing. From the theoretical orientation of the globalization and consumer culture debates, we will explore developments in environmentalism and contemporary literature that engage with these issues. We will look at three major points of focus in the critique of the American empire and the consumer culture that fuels it: the impact on the individual, the impact on cultural values, and the impact on the environment.

Readings may include: David Held & Anthony McGrew, eds., THE GLOBAL TRANSFORMATIONS READER; Michael Zimmerman et al, eds., ENVIRONMENTAL PHILOSOPHY; Eric Schlosser, FAST FOOD NATION; Howard Kunstler, THE LONG EMERGENCY; Al Gore, AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH; Carolyn Merchant, RADICAL ECOLOGY; Margaret Atwood, ORYZ AND CRAKE; Wendell Berry, THE ART OF THE COMMONPLACE; Chang-Rae Lee, ALOFT; Barbara Kingsolver, ANIMAL DREAMS; Barry Lopez, RESISTANCE.

Leslie Heywood, M 3:30-6:30 p.m.

 

 

ENG 593S ASIAN AMERICAN LITERATURE

This interdisciplinary seminar examines an incredibly diverse body of literature that presents unique cultural and philosophical questions in the contexts of national and transnational cultural politics. The historical chronology of American political and cultural movements forms an organizing principle for the course, beginning in the early twentieth century and ending with emergence of new global migrant labor and the newest challenges presented by critics and writers, post-9/11. Emphasis will be placed on examining key texts of Asian American literature and the changing debates and theoretical influences of, and methodological and pedagogical approaches to, their production and reception. Themes of citizenship and resistance(as inseparable from race, gender, sexuality, and labor) are among the primary threads that run through the course. The goal of this seminar is to provide an intensive forum to engage controversies and debates that emerge from or surround Asian American cultural productions. Assigned texts will include written and visual creative work and readings of historical, theoretical, and critical context. [Note: This course is different from the previously offered "ENG 593: Literature of Asian Diasporas"]

Lisa Yun, TR 1:15-2:40 p.m.

ENG 594A WRITERS AND OTHER ARTISTS

Unique mini-course running in conjunction with the Spring Readers Series and providing an opportunity to meet informally in a small-group setting with each of the readers to discuss their work, craft and lives as writers/artists. This is an outstanding opportunity for writers and anyone with a serious interest in the creative process.

Format: Mini-course graded on the S/U option. Meets for 12 sessions on the following schedule: an initial housekeeping meeting at 10 a.m. on the Wednesday previous to the first reading; then the five readings of the Spring Series at 8:15 p.m. on Tuesdays (specific dates to be determined), with the class discussion session meeting on the Wednesday following each reading from 9:40 until approximately 11:40 a.m. A final evaluation/summation is held at 10 a.m. the Wednesday following the last reading. Students are required to attend the readings and conversations, read a minimum of one book by each reader, write a brief response paper on each book/reader in preparation for the conversation and write one formal paper on a topic that arises from the course material (three to five pages).

Christine Gelineau, Two-credit course, offer Feb. 7 through May 2, T 8:15 p.m. and W 9:40-11:40 a.m.

ENG 640 POETRY WORKSHOP

In this experimental, intensive weekend workshop we will concentrate on the poetics of memory and place. We will begin with the assumption that physical, geographic and spiritual locations are rich with stories that students can learn to access and convey through poetry. We will work on drafting poems within the workshop and not on polishing previously written work. We will concentrate on writing about our own ancestries, locations and personal histories. Meets on three weekends during the spring semester. The dates for Spring 2007 are February 10 and 11, March 17 and 18, and April 21 and 22.

Maria Gillan, Course meets the weekends of February 10 and 11, March 17 and 18, and April 21 and 22.

ENG 642 NOVEL WORKSHOP

This course will not be a workshop in the usual sense, but a guided tour through the process of writing a novel, from gestation to defining the concept to planning out the structure and narrative to the act of composition. I do not expect that class members will finish a novel during the semester, but I will require that everyone begin one and write between 50 and 100 pages by semesters end. The idea of the course will be to get you launched, with the hope and expectation that you can finish on your own. The first five or six weeks will consist of long sessions in which I tell you what Ive learned about writing novels. The last three or four weeks will consist of class members reading their opening chapters, with one final class devoted to the business of writing and getting published. In between, our meetings will be relatively brief and mostly consist of problem sharing and solving.

I believe that the novel is an art form designed to both entertain and discomfort readers, and that its ultimate goal is to undermine our complacency while bringing us news of the world. In the novels you write for this class, all subject matters and literary approaches are welcome, from the traditionally realistic to the experimental. But please: no fantasy or science fiction. I have no experience in those genres.

Please note: this course is open to any student accepted into the Graduate Creative Writing Program, on a first come first serve basis.

Other students in the Graduate English Program may take the course, 1.) if there is room, and 2.) with the instructors approval, based upon samples of your work. Two or three short stories or chapters of a novel will suffice. Bring the work to the first class meeting.

John Vernon, M 1:10-4:10 p.m.

FREN 581L HEROES/HEROINES IN 18TH AND 19TH CENTURIES DRAMA AND PROSE

The course will focus on the critical study of heroes and heroines, the bold and engaging protagonists in the dramatic and prose works of the 18th and 19th centuries. They will be discussed against the background of social, literary, historical and religious ideas of the times. Some of the works read will be Marivaux's "Le jeu de l'amour et du hasard", Montesquieu's "Lettres Persanes", Vigny's "Chatterton", Hugo's "Hernani", Balzac's

"Le père Goriot" and others. Prerequisite: Two 300-level courses or consent of instructor

Sticca, T R 4:25-5:50

FREN 581P LANGUAGE THROUGH FILM

This course will focus on French language through film. Selected films by two major French directors, Marcel Pagnol and Eric Rohmer, will be available for viewing in the library. Selected passages will be shown and discussed in class. The dialogues in Rohmer's psychological dramas are in "standard" conversational French while Pagnol's dialogues use the dialect of Marseille in the late 1920s. Texts of the dialogues will be used as primary sources, reinforced by the spoken dialogues, for analysis of conversational style (vocabulary, grammar, oral rhythm and intonation, etc.) and for purposes of stylistic comparison. The technical aspects of film will not be prioritized, but certain elements (costuming, lighting, framing, sound) will certainly be relevant to the discussions. Selected excerpts will be viewed for in-class analysis and discussion. There will be occasional sample passages for written analysis. Two in-class examinations and 4-6 short written analyses will be required. French majors should note that this course will be counted as an "advanced language course" for purposes of the major requirements. REGULAR ATTENDANCE MANDATORY. Prerequisite: an advanced course in French language (FREN 351 or higher, or equivalent). FREN 344, 362 or another advanced course in literature will be good background, but not required.

Coates, T R 1:15-2:40

ITAL 563C ILLUSIONS OF A CENTURY- POETRY AND PROSE OF THE ROMANTIC AGE

Together with what will be the disastrous outcomes of political and nationalistic ideologies, the Nineteenth Century witnesses an enduring surge of creative energy. What makes the Romantic artist? What are their values, models, patterns of expressions? Where do they find inspiration and how do they view their role in the social, political, and literary scene? Are Classicism and Romanticism irreconcilable concepts and how do they stand in relation to modernity? Close reading of the poetry and prose works of Foscolo, Leopardi and Manzoni in order to outline the specific characteristics of Italian Romanticism. Prerequisite: 300-level or equivalent or consent of instructor.

LaValva, M W 3:30-4:55

ITAL 581R ADVANCED CRITICAL READING

Close reading of texts belonging to different genres and organized around basic themes (love, family, social commitment, identity, good and evil) in order to outline the interdisciplinary aspects of culture and the predominant characteristics of literary periods from the Middle Ages to the Twentieth Century. The direct objectives of the course are to provide students with sophisticated and appropriate linguistic skills; to offer a basic methodology for analysis; to promote a more conscious practice of reading and interpretation. ITAL 344 or equivalent or consent of instructor.

LaValva, M W 5:50-7:15

LING 443/ANTH 525/ANTH 443

Language, Culture and Semiotics

Introduction to semiotic theories of meaning in anthropology, linguistics and other related fields. Focuses on the contextual mediation of cultural meaning through various typologies of signs. Different semiotic methods and techniques contrasted. Analyses developed for broadly cultural and specifically linguistic projects. Problems of interpretation and their relation to science explored throughout.

Format: Lectures present material discussed in class. Exercises and final project presentations used to apply the material. Final grade based on exercises, examinations and a final project. Prerequisites: None Books: TBD

Glick, W, 3:30-6:30

MASS 580Z STUDENT DEVELOPMENT THEORY II

Theories of late adolescent and adult development in relation to their usefulness and application in designing student development programs and environments that support and are interactive with academic disciplines. Primary objectives of course are to assist students in developing intentional, theoretically informed practices in their work with and on behalf of college students; gain understanding of how theory can be used to describe college student development and conditions that facilitate such development; develop and define personal conceptualization of student development and relate conceptualization to practice; develop understanding and appreciation for how different race, nationality, class gender, age, sexual orientation, disability, and religious beliefs can influence development during college years; become more proficient in identifying, assessing, and solving various developmental related issues; enhance students ability to think reflectively, work collaboratively, critique and analyze theory, both verbally and in writing.

Sharon Holmes R, 6-9 pm

MUST HAVE COMPLETED MASS 580Y, STUDENT DEVELOPMENT THEORY I.

MASS 581X COMPASSIONATE COMMUNICATION

Students will study theory, research and practice related to compassionate communication. The course will combine both academic study and experiential approaches with the goal of understanding the impact of different modes of communication on individuals, relationships, communities and social structures.

Jane Connor W, 5:50-8:50pm

PHIL 550R HEGEL'S PHILOSOPHY OF SPIRIT

The entire course will be devoted to the close study of a single text, Hegel's Philosophy of Spirit, with particular attention to the facets of Hegel's "dialectical" theory of mind that not only undergird his radical approach to human emancipation, but also point in a radically anti-materialist direction, opening the way for serious consideration of psychic phenomena and other psycho-social realities denied by mechanical science.
Two papers totaling about 15 pages. One midterm examination

Weiss, M W 8:30-9:55

PHIL 605Q MORAL SUBJECTS AND MORAL CONDITIONS

Ethical theorists must offer accounts of the subjects (i.e. the people) about whom they are theorizing, as well as of the background conditions for their theory. What qualities should the moral subjects be assumed to have? What sort of background conditions should be assumed? Should the ethical theorist stipulate some idealized qualities for the moral subjects and background conditions? Or must ethical theory draw on descriptive accounts of actual people and actual life conditions? This course will present students with a variety of possible moral subjects and moral conditions (idealized and non-idealized, given through stipulation or through descriptive accounts taken from narrative or from empirical work). We will evaluate and (re)construct ethical theories in light of our reflections about the moral subjects and moral conditions.

Tessman, T 1:15-4:15

PHIL 621 ARISTOTLE'S METAPHYSICS IN CONTEXT

Detailed study of Aristotles Metaphysics in relation to the metaphysical theories of his predecessors, to some of the other books in the Aristotelian Corpus, and to subsequent metaphysical theories, especially among Aristotles commentators, ancient, medieval, and modern.

Text: Aristotles Metaphysics, tr. Joe Sachs, Green Lion Press, 1999

Preus, T R 8:30-9:55

PHIL 650H CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY: LEVINAS AND THE ETHICS OF PHENOMENOLOGY

This reading intensive seminar will place the ethical thought of Emmanuel Levinas in the tradition of Husserlian phenomenology. We will begin with a reading of Husserls central (teachable) work, The Cartesian Meditations. Through a slow reading of the text, we will examine the central tools and ideas of his transcendental phenomenology: the natural attitude, reduction, transcendental reduction, and apperception. We will also examine the development of Levinas thought as he moves from Husserl to his own ethical phenomenology.

Much of Levinas philosophical study of time and subjectivity flows from the unanswered questions of Husserls Fifth Meditation, specifically the approach to and relationship with alter ego, another person. Levinas earliest works directly engage the core problems of Husserlian phenomenology, specifically internal time consciousness and the constitution of world-time through the encounter with the other. As we read through Levinas, we will explore how questions of transcendence, subjectivity, intersubjectivity, and temporality give way to an ethical philosophy built on notions of alterity and responsibility. We will focus on Time and the Other, and Levinas two major works, Totality and Infinity and Otherwise than Being.

In the final section of the seminar, we will work through a selection of his essays and lectures in which he grounds his ethical phenomenology in classical Judaic texts and traditions. Additionally, we will compare Levinas work with that of another student of Husserl, Edith Stein.

Prerequisites: Two courses in philosophy.

Friedman, W 1:10-4:10

PHIL 666K/PIC 603A CONSCIOUSNESS, SCIENCE AND RELIGION II

Consciousness, Science, and Religion are quintessential human properties. Which is odd because they are in such conflict. Science and religion clash: they make different and substantial claims about the world. Though it tries, science cannot explain consciousness. And yet consciousness is necessary for both science and religion. In this course, we will examine this unhappy, tripartite partnership. This is part 2 of the course offered in Fall 2006. The Fall course concentrated on science and religion. Part 2 will concentrate on science and consciousness. We will read an important new philosophy book advocating a positive, rational dualism -- the view that consciousness is not a physical property of this universe.

Prerequisites: Two courses in philosophy.

Dietrich, R 1:15-4:15

PIC 550U/Phil 460Q/655B/COLI 574D DERRIDAS VOICES

A course reading Jacques Derrida, including selected works spanning his career, for example, Speech and Phenomena, Of Grammatology, Writing and Difference, Margins of Philosophy, Dissemination, Specters of Marx, The Politics of Friendship, The Work of Mourning, etc., including his readings of philosophers such as Plato, Husserl, Heidegger, Levinas, etc. and readings of his works by others, with an attempt to evoke an understanding and an affirmative way of life inspired by--in his own words--the processes of differance, trace, iterability, ex-appropriation, and so on; the problematics of the work of mourning, idealization, simulacrum, mimesis, iterability, the double injunction, the "double bind," and so forth.

Stephen David Ross, Tuesday 2:50-6:30

PIC 645M/AAAS 486F/AFST 480E/COLI 574T/PHIL 647M/WOMN 412D

TUMULTUOUS, PLACE, FATE AND BELONGING

Recent innovative narratives of African and Asian diasporic panoramas of memory, history, and psychic emotion, shift and reshape understandings of cultural, racial, and colonial relationalities. Impelled by trans-disciplinary, interactive discussions, the course will focus on distinctive narratives, yet in process, of tumultuous place, fate, and belonging at the beginning of the 21st century. Questions of trans-literacies, of foreignness, of diaspora with no margins, and of the narrator as medium, will be considered in conjunction with experimentation in listening, trans-generational interpretation, and imagination. Our points of departure include the mixed genre poetic writing Dionne Brand, Inventory, Padcha Tuntha-obas, respasses and composite_diplomacy, Harold Sonny Ladoo and Dionne Brand, No Pain Like This Body, Yunte Huang, CRIBS, Paul D. Millers sonic essay, Rhythm Science, selections from Aihwa Ong, Neoliberalism as Exception:Mutations in Citizenship and Sovereignty, Kimsoojas visual work and invisible projects, To Breathe/Respirare, Okwui Enwezor, Snap Judgments: New Positions in Contemporary African Photography, and film and video by Mansour Sora Wade, The Price of Forgiveness, Altaf-tyrewala, No God in Sight, Ming-liang Tsai, What Time is it There?, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Syndromes and a Century.

Jeffner Allen, M, 3:30-6:30

SPAN 581D SOR JUANA/ALARCON/SALAZAR

This course will explore the literary creativity and social marginalization of two New Spain's (Mexico's) greatest writers of the seventeenth century, Juan Ruiz de Alarcn and Sor Juana Ins de la Cruz. Emphasis on the theatrical works of both writers and the poetry of the latter, including the reasons for her unique place in Mexican culture today. Salazar y Torres was a Spaniard raised in Mexico . Today he is claimed by both countries, and he was considered the heir to Caldern's dramatic style, especially in works written for the Spanish court. Class discussion and participation necessary. Exams and research paper required. Prerequisites: SPAN 344 and SPAN 360 or equivalent.

OConnor, T R 2:50-4:15

SPAN 581S LATIN AMERICAN WOMEN WRITERS: BOOM-PRESENT

This course considers important literary contributions by Latin American women from the latter half of the twentieth century to the present. The primary focus is on the novel. We will engage in close textual analyses of works by: Elena Poniatowska, Claribel Alegria, Armonia Somers, Isabel Allende, Rosario Ferre, Maria Luisa Bombal, Clarice Lispector, Rosario Castellanos, Elena Garro, Diamela Eltit, and Sylvia Molloy. Format: Lecture/discussion. Grade based on two examinations and a research paper. Prerequisite: SPAN 344, 360 or 370 or consent of instructor Sullivan, R 4:25-7:20

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